Science & Religion

    Cards (34)

    • What are major belief systems that make claims about the world?
      Religions and political ideologies
    • How does science differ from belief systems like religion?
      Science explains the world, religion guides behavior
    • What is a key feature of science as a belief system?
      It has cognitive power to explain and predict
    • What has been the impact of science on society?
      Improved medicine, transport, and communication
    • What are some problems caused by science according to the text?
      Pollution, global warming, and nuclear weapons
    • What does Karl Popper argue about science?
      It is an open belief system subject to scrutiny
    • What principle governs science according to Popper?
      Falsificationism
    • How does scientific knowledge develop according to Popper?
      It builds on previous scientists' achievements
    • What did Sir Isaac Newton say about scientific progress?
      He stood on the shoulders of giants
    • How do knowledge claims in science survive?
      They live or die by the evidence
    • What does Robert Merton argue about science?
      It has norms that promote knowledge growth
    • What are the four norms identified by Merton known as?
      CUDOS
    • What does CUDOS stand for in scientific norms?
      • Communism: Share knowledge with the community
      • Universalism: Judged by objective criteria
      • Disinterestedness: Knowledge for its own sake
      • Organised Scepticism: Open to questioning and criticism
    • What is Polanyi's view on science?
      It is a closed belief system rejecting challenges
    • What does Thomas Kuhn argue about science?
      It is a closed belief system based on paradigms
    • What is a scientific paradigm according to Kuhn?
      A set of shared assumptions guiding research
    • What happens when scientists challenge the dominant paradigm?
      They face ridicule and rejection
    • What happened to Immanuel Velikovsky's theory?
      It was rejected without proper examination
    • What does Kuhn say about scientific education?
      It socializes scientists into the dominant paradigm
    • What is a scientific revolution according to Kuhn?
      A period when new ideas are accepted after anomalies
    • How do interpretivist sociologists view science?
      As a socially constructed closed belief system
    • What do Knorr-Cetina's views emphasize about scientific observations?
      They are constructed using new instruments
    • What does Woolgar argue about scientists interpreting evidence?
      They must devise theories to explain findings
    • How do conflict theories view scientific knowledge?
      As serving the interests of dominant groups
    • What does Robin Horton argue about religion?
      It is a closed belief system with unchallengeable claims
    • How is religious knowledge characterized according to Horton?
      As sacred and divinely authoritative
    • What are 'get out clauses' in closed belief systems?
      Devices that reinforce beliefs against challenges
    • What does Evans-Pritchard's study illustrate about closed belief systems?
      Believers are trapped within their own assumptions
    • What do postmodernists believe about knowledge claims?
      All knowledge is uncertain and open to doubt
    • How do postmodernists view science and religion?
      As meta-narratives falsely claiming truth
    • What do postmodernists argue about competing explanations?
      They should be recognized and tolerated
    • What is the focus of exam question 13?
      Outline two ways science is a belief system
    • What does exam question 14 ask for?
      Analyze two ways science is a closed belief system
    • What is the focus of exam question 15?
      Evaluate science and religion as belief systems